Some overreactions I've benefitted or lost from
League matches are a great place for overreactions. Here's a couple:
My opponent plays a safety, and because he's playing a safety, I don't even think to look if I have a shot at the next ball, I immediately start lining up the kick as I walk to the table. He looks at the line, and exclaims that he left me straight in on the ball. Sure enough, I'm straight in! If he hadn't said anything, I'd have kicked at it and at least left him another shot if not ball in hand.
My teammate, playing 8 ball, is on his last ball before the 8, 8's three inches from the side pocket on the center string. He plays for shape to get straight in on the 8, and misses his spot by six inches on an otherwise open table. Visualize this. It's a 30 degree cut in the side. He misses an easy shot on the 8 because he's still upset that he "missed his position". Talking to him afterwards, I realize that he was still visualizing the shot from the place he'd intended to be shooting from rather than the spot he was actually shooting from.
I'm playing a length-of-table shot straight into the corner, hit it too hard, object ball rattles out. I cuss, very much loudly, turn around, and slam my cue into the cue holder. Pause for effect. My opponent says "nice shot", 'cause the ball rolled into the opposite corner. I ended up rattling myself and giving away the rest of the match.
Reactions are fine, just not overreactions. You can't allow yourself to give your opponent more information or more confidence, and you can't give yourself a reason to doubt that you can come back from a mistake.
Another thing I've noticed from league pool is that the higher your skill level, the lower your margin of error for overreacting. Low-range players complain about missing shots. Mid-range players complain about hooking themselves or failing to hook their opponents. High-range players complain about missing the quarter inch they were trying to leave for. It takes all kinds.
League matches are a great place for overreactions. Here's a couple:
My opponent plays a safety, and because he's playing a safety, I don't even think to look if I have a shot at the next ball, I immediately start lining up the kick as I walk to the table. He looks at the line, and exclaims that he left me straight in on the ball. Sure enough, I'm straight in! If he hadn't said anything, I'd have kicked at it and at least left him another shot if not ball in hand.
My teammate, playing 8 ball, is on his last ball before the 8, 8's three inches from the side pocket on the center string. He plays for shape to get straight in on the 8, and misses his spot by six inches on an otherwise open table. Visualize this. It's a 30 degree cut in the side. He misses an easy shot on the 8 because he's still upset that he "missed his position". Talking to him afterwards, I realize that he was still visualizing the shot from the place he'd intended to be shooting from rather than the spot he was actually shooting from.
I'm playing a length-of-table shot straight into the corner, hit it too hard, object ball rattles out. I cuss, very much loudly, turn around, and slam my cue into the cue holder. Pause for effect. My opponent says "nice shot", 'cause the ball rolled into the opposite corner. I ended up rattling myself and giving away the rest of the match.
Reactions are fine, just not overreactions. You can't allow yourself to give your opponent more information or more confidence, and you can't give yourself a reason to doubt that you can come back from a mistake.
Another thing I've noticed from league pool is that the higher your skill level, the lower your margin of error for overreacting. Low-range players complain about missing shots. Mid-range players complain about hooking themselves or failing to hook their opponents. High-range players complain about missing the quarter inch they were trying to leave for. It takes all kinds.